No Higher Education in Ohio
The latest thinking is 4.5 billion years ago there was an Earth, but no oceans. The water arrived disguised as rock — dry-looking stones carrying wet cargo, floating around a young star, waiting on time. Nobody voted on this. Nobody needed to. Physics doesn't hold hearings. Ohio's Senate Bill 1 requires the state's public universities to treat "controversial beliefs and policies" with neutrality — a list that includes, by statute, climate policy, alongside immigration, marriage, DEI, abortion, electoral politics. Faculty are directed to "allow and encourage students to reach their own conclusions" on designated controversial topics. Critics argue that, in practice, this risks treating established scientific conclusions as if they were merely competing viewpoints. More than 1,500 people submitted testimony against the bill; opponents, including the ACLU of Ohio, called it the Higher Education Destruction Act. It passed anyway, 20 to 11. Ohio's public...